Stories

Trump suggests he may cut off insurer payments

President Trump threatened on Twitter to end what he called "bailouts" for health insurance companies — a term he has used to refer to the payments insurers receive for the Affordable Care Act subsidies they are required to give to low-income people.

Why it matters: The Trump administration has been making the payments on a month-to-month basis, but health insurers have been worried that Trump would cut them off after the defeat of the Senate's ACA repeal plans. Without those payments, insurers warn that ACA premiums will skyrocket even more — because they still have to provide the subsidies and have to recover their costs.

Self-driving lab head urges freeze after "nightmare" fatality

Uber self-driving car in Pittsburgh. Photo: Jeff Swensen / Getty

Carmakers and technology companies should freeze their race to field autonomous vehicles because "clearly the technology is not where it needs to be," said Raj Rajkumar, head of Carnegie Mellon University's leading self-driving laboratory.

What he said: Speaking a few hours after a self-driven vehicle ran over and killed a pedestrian in Arizona, Rajkumar said, "This isn't like a bug with your phone. People can get killed. Companies need to take a deep breath. The technology is not there yet. We need to keep people in the loop."

Why it matters: Virtually every major car company on theplanet, in addition to numerous startups and tech companies, are doing live testing of self-driving vehicles — and pushing policy officials to allow them to do so.

But Rajkumar said that ordinary people in addition to automakers and tech companies have developed far too much trust in self-driving technology simply because the cars have driven hundreds of thousands of miles with only one fatality before this — a Tesla driver who slammed into the side of a truck last year.

Quote "This is the nightmare all of us working in this domain always worried about."

Brother of Florida shooter arrested for trespassing at Stoneman Douglas High

Zachary Cruz, the brother of Nikolas Cruz who confessed to carrying out last month's massacre at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, was arrested Monday after authorities say he trespassed on the site where the shooting took place, per the Miami Herald.

Situational awareness: The arrest comes just over a month after his brother shot and killed 14 students and 3 staff members to which prosecutors are seeking the death penalty.

The details: The 18-year-old was repeatedly warned not to be on school grounds, but he "surpassed all locked doors and gates and proceeded to ride his skateboard through school grounds,” according to a police report the publication quoted. The teen, who reportedly attended the school once, was seen around 4:30 p.m. Monday after students were dismissed. The report said he wanted to ‘reflect on the shooting and to soak it in.” Zachary Cruz was booked into Broward’s main jail Monday night, per the Miami Herald.